Scam Recovery
Scam Recovery

Scam Recovery: How to Get Your Money Back and Move Forward

by

Last Updated: April 2026 | Reading Time: ~5 minutes


What Is Scam Recovery?

Scam recovery is the process of reclaiming money or assets lost to fraud — and rebuilding your financial and emotional well-being afterward. It covers reporting the crime, disputing charges with your bank, and healing from the psychological impact of being deceived.

Scams are more prevalent than ever. According to the FBI's IC3, investment scams alone caused $8.6 billion in losses in the most recent reporting period, with 72% involving cryptocurrency. The FTC found that in 2025, nearly 30% of reported scam losses — totaling $2.1 billion — originated on social media, eight times the 2020 figure.


How to Start the Scam Recovery Process

1. Stop Contact and Document Everything

The moment you suspect fraud, cut off all communication with the scammer. Then gather evidence: screenshots, transaction records, emails, and any usernames or phone numbers involved. This documentation is the foundation of any recovery claim.

2. Contact Your Bank Immediately

Time is critical. Call your bank or card issuer right away and ask them to block accounts, initiate a dispute if a card was used, and monitor for further suspicious activity. Credit card payments offer the strongest fraud protections. Wire transfers are much harder to reverse once processed.

3. Report to the Authorities

Reporting won't guarantee recovery, but it's essential — for you and for future victims. Key places to report:

  • FTC: ReportFraud.ftc.gov
  • FBI IC3: ic3.gov
  • Local police (especially for large losses)
  • CFPB for bank-related fraud

4. Protect Your Identity

If personal information was shared, act fast: place a fraud alert or credit freeze with Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion; change compromised passwords; and enable multi-factor authentication on financial accounts.

5. Watch Out for Recovery Scams

This is critical: if someone contacts you promising to recover your money for an upfront fee, it's almost certainly another scam. The FBI's IC3 recorded $1.4 billion in losses to these secondary "recovery scams" in a single year. Legitimate agencies never charge upfront fees for recovery help.


Realistic Recovery Expectations

Recovery depends heavily on how you paid:

  • Credit card: Best odds — strong dispute protections
  • Wire transfer: Difficult, but report within hours for the best chance
  • Cryptocurrency: Hard to recover; reporting within 24–72 hours is critical before funds are laundered
  • Gift cards or cash: Near impossible to recover

The honest reality: full financial recovery is rare. Scammers move money fast, often across borders. But reporting quickly always improves your odds and helps investigators build larger cases.


Beware of Scammers on Facebook Groups and Reddit

After being scammed, many victims turn to Facebook groups and Reddit communities to share their experience, vent their frustration, or seek advice on how to recover their money. This is completely understandable — these spaces can feel supportive and relatable. But they also attract a dangerous second wave of predators.

Recovery scammers actively patrol these platforms, looking for fresh victims. They monitor posts from people who have just been defrauded and swoop in with offers to help. They may comment publicly, send direct messages, or even pose as other victims who "successfully recovered" their funds through a particular service.

Common tactics you'll see in these spaces:

  • Fake testimonials: Scammers create convincing posts or comments claiming a recovery service got their money back. These accounts are often newly created or have very little history.
  • Unsolicited DMs: Someone replies to your post in a Facebook group or subreddit and then slides into your direct messages with a "recovery specialist" contact.
  • Impersonating real agencies: They may claim to represent the FBI, FTC, or a legitimate law firm to build credibility.
  • Upfront fee requests: They'll ask for payment before doing anything — a guaranteed red flag.

The rule is simple: never trust anyone who reaches out to you first after you post about being scammed. Legitimate help doesn't come through cold outreach in a comment section. If you use these communities for emotional support (which can be genuinely helpful), keep your personal details vague and never engage with anyone offering paid recovery services through private messages.

Stick to verified, official channels — ReportFraud.ftc.gov, ic3.gov, your bank, and established nonprofits — for any recovery action.


The Emotional Side of Recovery

Scam recovery isn't only financial. Victims commonly experience shame, grief, and a loss of trust — in others and in themselves. It's important to remember: falling for a scam is not a failure of intelligence. These are sophisticated, professionally run operations designed to exploit basic human trust.

Healing steps: talk to someone you trust, connect with survivor communities like FightCybercrime.org, and consider professional counseling if the emotional impact is significant.


Key Resources

ResourceContact
FTC (Report Fraud)ReportFraud.ftc.gov
FBI Internet Crimeic3.gov
AARP Fraud Watch Network877-908-3360
FightCybercrime.orgPeer support for scam survivors

Bottom Line

Act fast, report everywhere, protect your identity, and be wary of anyone promising to recover your money for a fee. While not all losses can be reclaimed, taking quick and thorough action gives you the best possible chance — and reporting your experience helps protect others.


This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or financial advice.

Dr. Max Langdon

Dr. Max Langdon

— Senior Digital Dating Analy

Dr. Max Langdon specializes in the intersection of human behavior and dating technology. His work focuses on fairness, verification ethics, and trust design in online relationship platforms. He advises dating and lifestyle platforms on data integrity, user safety, and long-term engagement strategies.
Expertise: Human behavior, online dating platforms, user safety, trust design